The contents of the supplements are all to supply ingredients for preventing persistent damage in inner ear but the contradiction is that they try to sell it to sufferers who already has damaged hearing. If you ask them if it is a cure they will tell you that their product prevents any further damage. But this is not mentioned clearly in the introduction page. They aim to sell it as a cure to sufferers by "word games" like the others such as tinnicare.

if we could kick the people who make these websites in the nuts !!!! that would feel great

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I feel like my tinnitus has gotten a little louder lately and I was looking around the net and came across the tinnitus miracle site. I was thinking of trying it depending on what you have to do. I typed in tinnitus miracle is a scam in Google and can't seem to find anything. So could you tell me why it is "crap?"

I got some of the Lipoflavinoid they advertise on TV but it made my BP rise and my doctor didn't like that.

p.s. I've developed some bulges behind my ears also. Been to the doctor, had a CT scan which showed normal. Went to an ENT who felt around and said it was my skull. Said I'd probably always had them but didn't notice. No I haven't always had them. Primary doc said may be arthritis but I didn't know you could get that in your skull. Also I drink a lot of that International Delight iced coffee. Wonder if the caffeine could be making it worse?

I typed in tinnitus miracle is a scam in Google and can't seem to find anything. So could you tell me why it is "crap?"

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Because the Tinnitus Miracle marketers are clever.

They have created lots of phoney review sites, videos and such with keywords (for titles, headings, etc) tinnitus miracle scam

So when you google for tinnitus miracle scam, you'll get all sorts of "Is Tinnitus Miracle a Scam?" results (which Tinnitus Miracle advertisers have created) that try to convince you to buy the product by giving a great false impression of the product.

Also, Tinnitus Miracle has gone to such lengths as hiring cheap actors (you can get these from Fiverr for $5) to create encouraging testimonials.

Most of all, if there's a miracle and tinnitus in the product's name, it's alarming in and of itself.

It does not shock me at all to see scumbags such as "Tinnitus Miracle" trying to make a buck off the suffering of others. There have been such trash around since the beginning of time.

What amazes me is the great number of people who must buy into this scam. It takes a lot of money to advertise, package and promote such a snake oil product in this modern age.

There must be a large number of desperate people buying this garbage. It truly amazes me though that people will believe almost anything as long as it is on the web, or printed in a paper, or endorsed by some idiot they have never even heard of.

They have created lots of phoney review sites, videos and such with keywords (for titles, headings, etc) tinnitus miracle scam

So when you google for tinnitus miracle scam, you'll get all sorts of "Is Tinnitus Miracle a Scam?" results (which Tinnitus Miracle advertisers have created) that try to convince you to buy the product by giving a great false impression of the product.

Also, Tinnitus Miracle has gone to such lengths as hiring cheap actors (you can get these from Fiverr for $5) to create encouraging testimonials.

Most of all, if there's a miracle and tinnitus in the product's name, it's alarming in and of itself.

Tinnitus Control cheated me of $71 when I returned their product. How? The package I returned cost me $123.85 but they refunded me only $51.85. Plus they took an additional $10 as "restocking fee" and I paid UPS $11 to send the package back unopened.

Tinnitus Control cheated me of $71 when I returned their product. How? The package I returned cost me $123.85 but they refunded me only $51.85. Plus they took an additional $10 as "restocking fee" and I paid UPS $11 to send the package back unopened.

I do wonder how there can be "active ingredients" in a homeopathic solution...

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A bit of an old post but I couldn't help but to laugh at the picture. Alcohol is the only active ingredient in this thing yet listed as ''inactive''. A child could overdose if he drank the whole thing I guess.

Tinnitus Control looks very much like a scam. They take away your money, more than half the cost on this or that pretext, when you return their product package, fully intact, unopened and the delivery charge paid for by the buyer!